CSX terminal could grow with $21 million grant

Sunday

Jun 9, 2013 at 12:01 AMJun 9, 2013 at 11:57 AM

Freight traffic that already exceeds expectations and further growth once route improvements are completed between Ohio and the Atlantic coast both justify expansion, CSX officials said during a news conference and media tour last week at the facility in Wood County's Henry Township, just west of North Baltimore.

NORTH BALTIMORE, Ohio — CSX Transportation’s Northwest Ohio Terminal has been open slightly longer than two years, but already the railroad company is talking about expanding its capacity. & amp; lt; /p>

That is, as long as the federal government is willing to pick up half the tab.

Freight traffic that already exceeds expectations and further growth once route improvements are completed between Ohio and the Atlantic coast both justify expansion, CSX officials said during a news conference and media tour last week at the facility in Wood County’s Henry Township, just west of North Baltimore.

The proposal is to extend the terminal’s container-handling area by 2,300 feet and add two wide-span gantry cranes to the five operating there.

But without a U.S. Department of Transportation grant to cover half of the project’s estimated $42 million cost, it won’t be built, said Rusty Orben, CSX’s director of public affairs.

Spending just the $21 million that CSX has budgeted for the project would produce “half a loaf,” Orben said after the tour.

CSX plans to file its Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery grant application, for which the Wood County commissioners voted a supporting resolution this month, by Monday, and it expects to hear a response in September, Orben said.

If the grant is approved, he said, construction will start next spring and be finished by the first quarter of 2015.

The 500 acres CSX acquired last decade for its initial construction, a facility that employs nearly 300 people and cost $175 million in CSX and private-partner funds to build, has ample space for the proposed expansion.

“This site was set up with a footprint to enable expansion,” said Joel Kuhlman, a Wood County commissioner. “Construction will be on-site and won’t interfere with the surrounding community.'

The terminal now has capacity to handle about 2 million freight containers a year, including: some that are unloaded from one railcar and reloaded onto another; others that stay loaded on the same railcar, but the car is switched from one train to another; and a few that are transferred between trains and trucks at the facility.

How much of that capacity now is in use wasn’t disclosed, but Paul Hand, the North Region general manager for CSX Intermodal Terminals Inc., said traffic has grown significantly since the terminal’s 2011 opening.

He cited the example of CSX’s terminal in Louisville, Ky., which formerly loaded or unloaded about 21,000 freight containers annually — volume Hand said has doubled now that cargo can be shipped to any terminal CSX serves, not just the few that had direct service from Louisville.

When the North Baltimore facility opened, officials said truck activity would start at about 35 both in and out per day. That’s up to 75 now, Hand said.

That growth should accelerate, officials said, once underpass and tunnel work on a CSX line across eastern Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Maryland allows full-capacity operation of “ double-stack” container trains. Additional tunnel and bridge work is proposed that would open up routes to ports in Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia for such trains.

John Stewart, chairman of the Henry Township trustees, said expanding the terminal would be good for the community.

“It’s jobs — it’s what people are looking for: good-paying jobs with good benefits,” Stewart said, although railroad officials made no commitments about the exact number of jobs the expansion might provide.

dpatch@theblade.com

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